scholarly journals Sparse representation of vectors in lattices and semigroups

Author(s):  
Iskander Aliev ◽  
Gennadiy Averkov ◽  
Jesús A. De Loera ◽  
Timm Oertel

AbstractWe study the sparsity of the solutions to systems of linear Diophantine equations with and without non-negativity constraints. The sparsity of a solution vector is the number of its nonzero entries, which is referred to as the $$\ell _0$$ ℓ 0 -norm of the vector. Our main results are new improved bounds on the minimal $$\ell _0$$ ℓ 0 -norm of solutions to systems $$A\varvec{x}=\varvec{b}$$ A x = b , where $$A\in \mathbb {Z}^{m\times n}$$ A ∈ Z m × n , $${\varvec{b}}\in \mathbb {Z}^m$$ b ∈ Z m and $$\varvec{x}$$ x is either a general integer vector (lattice case) or a non-negative integer vector (semigroup case). In certain cases, we give polynomial time algorithms for computing solutions with $$\ell _0$$ ℓ 0 -norm satisfying the obtained bounds. We show that our bounds are tight. Our bounds can be seen as functions naturally generalizing the rank of a matrix over $$\mathbb {R}$$ R , to other subdomains such as $$\mathbb {Z}$$ Z . We show that these new rank-like functions are all NP-hard to compute in general, but polynomial-time computable for fixed number of variables.

2021 ◽  
Vol 32 (02) ◽  
pp. 209-233
Author(s):  
Yuichi Asahiro ◽  
Jesper Jansson ◽  
Eiji Miyano ◽  
Hirotaka Ono ◽  
T. P. Sandhya

The goal of an outdegree-constrained edge-modification problem is to find a spanning subgraph or supergraph [Formula: see text] of an input undirected graph [Formula: see text] such that either: (Type I) the number of edges in [Formula: see text] is minimized or maximized and [Formula: see text] can be oriented to satisfy some specified constraints on the vertices’ resulting outdegrees; or: (Type II) among all subgraphs or supergraphs of [Formula: see text] that can be constructed by deleting or inserting a fixed number of edges, [Formula: see text] admits an orientation optimizing some objective involving the vertices’ outdegrees. This paper introduces eight new outdegree-constrained edge-modification problems related to load balancing called (Type I) MIN-DEL-MAX, MIN-INS-MIN, MAX-INS-MAX, and MAX-DEL-MIN and (Type II) [Formula: see text]-DEL-MAX, [Formula: see text]-INS-MIN, [Formula: see text]-INS-MAX, and [Formula: see text]-DEL-MIN. In each of the eight problems, the input is a graph and the goal is to delete or insert edges so that the resulting graph has an orientation in which the maximum outdegree (taken over all vertices) is small or the minimum outdegree is large. We first present a framework that provides algorithms for solving all eight problems in polynomial time on unweighted graphs. Next we investigate the inapproximability of the edge-weighted versions of the problems, and design polynomial-time algorithms for six of the problems on edge-weighted trees.


2014 ◽  
Vol 565 ◽  
pp. 198-204
Author(s):  
Chia Min Pai ◽  
Yu Ling Liu ◽  
Chou Jung Hsu

This paper explored single-machine rescheduling of new orders with both learning and deterioration effects consideration. According to the literature research, rescheduling means that a set of original jobs has already been scheduled to minimize classical objective, and later a new set of jobs arrives and creates a disruption. Two kinds of constraints, the maximum sequence disruption of the original jobs cannot exceed a fixed number and the maximum time disruption of the original jobs cannot exceed a known value, were examined. The objectives of this paper were to minimize total completion time based on the constraints respectively. We proved that both problems are solved in polynomial time algorithms.


2019 ◽  
Vol 234 (5) ◽  
pp. 291-299
Author(s):  
Anton Shutov ◽  
Andrey Maleev

Abstract A new approach to the problem of coordination sequences of periodic structures is proposed. It is based on the concept of layer-by-layer growth and on the study of geodesics in periodic graphs. We represent coordination numbers as sums of so called sector coordination numbers arising from the growth polygon of the graph. In each sector we obtain a canonical form of the geodesic chains and reduce the calculation of the sector coordination numbers to solution of the linear Diophantine equations. The approach is illustrated by the example of the 2-homogeneous kra graph. We obtain three alternative descriptions of the coordination sequences: explicit formulas, generating functions and recurrent relations.


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